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Aaron's Rod, a novel by D. H. Lawrence |
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CHAPTER V. AT THE OPERA |
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_ A friend had given Josephine Ford a box at the opera for one evening; our story continues by night. The box was large and important, near the stage. Josephine and Julia were there, with Robert and Jim--also two more men. The women sat in the front of the box, conspicuously. They were both poor, they were rather excited. But they belonged to a set which looked on social triumphs as a downfall that one allows oneself. The two men, Lilly and Struthers, were artists, the former literary, the latter a painter. Lilly sat by Josephine in the front of the box: he was her little lion of the evening. Few women can sit in the front of a big box, on a crowded and full- Josephine was an artist. In Paris she was a friend of a very This evening her dress was a simple, but a marvellously poised thing Not being fashionable, they were in the box when the overture began. Josephine leaned her elbow and looked down: she knew how arresting The vulgar bodies of the fleshy women were unendurable. They all But the leading tenor was the chief pain. He was large, stout, swathed Josephine looked down with the fixed gravity of a Red Indian, "Isn't it nasty?" she said. "You shouldn't look so closely," he said. But he took it calmly, "Oh-ho-ho!" laughed Julia. "It's so fu-nny--so funny!" "Of course we are too near," said Robert. "Say you admire that pink fondant over there," said Struthers, "Oh, the fondant--exactly--the fondant! Yes, I admire her immensely! Josephine was scanning the auditorium. So many myriads of faces--like The curtain rose, the opera wound its slow length along. The audience "Oh, isn't it too wonderful!" cried Julia. "I am wild with excitement. "Absolutely wild," said Lilly laconically. "Where is Scott to-night?" asked Struthers. Julia turned to him and gave him a long, queer look from her dark "He's in the country," she said, rather enigmatic. "Don't you know, he's got a house down in Dorset," said Robert, "Is she going?" said Lilly. "She hasn't decided," replied Robert. "Oh! What's the objection?" asked Struthers. "Well, none whatsoever, as far as can be seen, except that she can't "Julia's got no mind," said Jim rudely. "Oh! Hear the brotherly verdict!" laughed Julia hurriedly. "You mean to go down to Dorset alone!" said Struthers. "Why not?" replied Robert, answering for her. "And stay how long?" "Oh--as long as it lasts," said Robert again. "Starting with eternity," said Lilly, "and working back to a "And what's the matter?--looks bad in the eyes of the world?" "Yes--about that. Afraid of compromising herself--" Lilly looked at them. "Depends what you take the world to mean. Do you mean us in this box, "Do you think, Lilly, that we're the world?" said Robert ironically. "Oh, yes, I guess we're shipwrecked in this box, like Robinson Crusoes. "But WON'T they?" said Struthers. "Not unless you put your head in their hands," said Lilly. "I don't know--" said Jim. But the curtain had risen, they hushed him into silence. All through the next scene, Julia puzzled herself, as to whether she When the curtain dropped she turned. "You see," she said, screwing up her eyes, "I have to think of "My dear Julia, can't you believe that I'm tired of being thought of," Julia screwed up her eyes in a slow smile, oddly cogitating. "Well, who AM I to think of?" she asked. "Yourself," said Lilly. "Oh, yes! Why, yes! I never thought of that!" She gave a hurried "Which of them will find you the greatest treat," said Lilly "Anyhow," interjected Robert nervously, "it will be something new "Stale buns for you, old boy," said Jim drily. "I don't say so. But--" exclaimed the flushed, full-blooded Robert, "How long ha' you been married? Eh?" asked Jim. "Six years!" sang Julia sweetly. "Good God!" "You see," said Robert, "Julia can't decide anything for herself. She "Put it plainly--" began Struthers. "But don't you know, it's no USE putting it plainly," cried Julia. "But DO you want to be with Scott, out and out, or DON'T you?" said "Exactly!" chimed Robert. "That's the question for you to answer "I WON'T answer it," she cried. "Why should I?" And she looked away The men looked at one another in some comic consternation. "Oh, damn it all!" said the long Jim, rising and stretching himself. He gave his malevolent grin round the company, then went out. He did "Of course, if she loves Scott--" began Struthers. Julia suddenly turned with wild desperation, and cried: "I like him tremendously--tre-men-dous-ly! He DOES understand." "Which we don't," said Robert. Julia smiled her long, odd smile in their faces: one might almost say "What do YOU think, Josephine?" asked Lilly. Josephine was leaning froward. She started. Her tongue went rapidly "Yes." "I think Julia should go with Scott," said Josephine. "She'll bother "Of course she does," cried Robert. Julia, with her chin resting on her arms, in a position which "Well then--" began Struthers. But the music struck up softly. They When the curtain came down for the end of the act, the men got up. "Would you like tea or anything?" Lilly asked. The women refused. The men filtered out on to the crimson and white, "Of course," she replied, "one can't decide such a thing like drinking "Of course, one can't, dear Tanny," said Julia. "After all, one doesn't leave one's husband every day, to go and live "It's difficult!" cried Julia. "It's difficult! I feel they all want "Oh, men with their beastly logic, their either-this-or-that stunt, "I do! Oh, I do, Tanny! I DO love him, I love him dearly. I think "But you like Scott better," said Tanny. "Only because he--he's different," sang Julia, in long tones. "You "Of course I don't think that matters," she replied. "But it does, it matters tremendously, dear Tanny, tremendously." "Of course," Tanny sheered off. "I can see Scott has great "Exactly!" cried Julia. "He UNDERSTANDS" "And I believe he's a real artist. You might even work together. You "Yes!--Yes!--" Julia spoke with a long, pondering hiss. "It might be AWFULLY nice," said Tanny rapturously. "Yes!--It might!--It might--!" pondered Julia. Suddenly she gave "And wouldn't Robert be an AWFULLY nice lover for Josephine! Oh, Josephine, who had been gazing down into the orchestra, turned now, "But I don't want a lover, Julia," she said, hurt. "Josephine dear! Dear old Josephine! Don't you really! Oh, yes, "A great difference," said Tanny. "Yes, it makes a difference, it makes a difference," mused Julia. She screwed up her eyes, looking at Tanny. "Perhaps it would do Robert good to be hurt a little," said Tanny. "Yes!--Yes!--I see what you mean, Tanny!--Poor old ROB-ert! Oh, poor "He DOES seem young," said Tanny. "One doesn't forgive it." "He is young," said Julia. "I'm five years older than he. "He's only "Robert is young, and inexperienced," said Josephine, suddenly turning "Is he inexperienced, Josephine dear? IS he?" sang Julia. Josephine "Ah, he's not so innocent as all that," said Tanny roughly. "Those "They are, aren't they, Tanny," repeated Julia softly. "They're old-- Below, the orchestra was coming in. Josephine was watching closely. "Do you see anybody we know, Josephine?" she asked. Josephine started. "No," she said, looking at her friends quickly and furtively. "Dear old Josephine, she knows all sorts of people," sang Julia. At that moment the men returned. "Have you actually come back!" exclaimed Tanny to them. They sat "If only somebody loved me!" he complained. "If only somebody loved "But we ALL love you," said Josephine, laughing uneasily. "Why aren't "I'm not satisfied. I'm not satisfied," murmured Jim. "Would you like to be wrapped in swaddling bands and laid at the Jim opened his mouth in a grin, and gazed long and malevolently at "Yes," he said. Then he sprawled his long six foot of limb and body "You should try loving somebody, for a change," said Tanny. "You've Jim eyed her narrowly. "I couldn't love YOU," he said, in vicious tones. "_A la bonne heure_!" said Tanny. But Jim sank his chin on his chest, and repeated obstinately: "I want to be loved." "How many times have you been loved?" Robert asked him. "It would be Jim looked at Robert long and slow, but did not answer. "Did you ever keep count?" Tanny persisted. Jim looked up at her, malevolent. "I believe I did," he replied. "Forty is the age when a man should begin to reckon up," said Lilly. Jim suddenly sprang to his feet, and brandished his fists. "I'll pitch the lot of you over the bloody rail," he said. He glared at them, from under his bald, wrinkled forehead. Josephine "Do you recognise anyone in the orchestra?" she asked. The party in the box had become dead silent. They looked down. The "It IS the chap--What?" he exclaimed excitedly, looking round at his "Who?" said Tanny. "It IS he?" said Josephine quietly, meeting Jim's eye. "Sure!" he barked. He was leaning forward over the ledge, rattling a programme in his "There you are!" he exclaimed triumphantly. "That's the chap." "Who? Who?" they cried. But neither Jim nor Josephine would vouchsafe an answer. The next was the long interval. Jim and Josephine gazed down at "Is it that man Aaron Sisson?" asked Robert. "Where? Where?" cried Julia. "It can't be." But Josephine's face was closed and silent. She did not answer. The whole party moved out on to the crimson-carpeted gangway. Groups "Well!" cried Josephine to him. "How do you come here?" "I play the flute," he answered, as he shook hands. The little crowd stood in the gangway and talked. "How wonderful of you to be here!" cried Julia. He laughed. "Do you think so?" he answered. "Yes, I do.--It seems so FAR from Shottle House and Christmas Eve.--Oh, Aaron looked at her, but did not answer. "We've heard all about you," said Tanny playfully. "Oh, yes," he replied. "Come!" said Josephine, rather irritated. "We crowd up the gangway." Aaron stood and looked down at the dishevelled theatre. "You get all the view," he said. "We do, don't we!" cried Julia. "More than's good for us," said Lilly. "Tell us what you are doing. You've got a permanent job?" asked "Yes--at present." "Ah! It's more interesting for you than at Beldover." She had taken her seat. He looked down at her dusky young face. Her "It's a change," he said, smiling. "Oh, it must be more than that," she said. "Why, you must feel a He smiled, as if he were laughing at her silently. She flushed. "But isn't it?" she persisted. "Yes. It can be," he replied. He looked as if he were quietly amused, but dissociated. None of the "You're a chap I always hoped would turn up again," said Jim. "Oh, yes!" replied Aaron, smiling as if amused. "But perhaps he doesn't like us! Perhaps he's not glad that we turned The flautist turned and looked at her. "You can't REMEMBER us, can you?" she asked. "Yes," he said. "I can remember you." "Oh," she laughed. "You are unflattering." He was annoyed. He did not know what she was getting at. "How are your wife and children?" she asked spitefully. "All right, I think." "But you've been back to them?" cried Josephine in dismay. He looked at her, a slow, half smiling look, but did not speak. "Come and have a drink. Damn the women," said Jim uncouthly, seizing |